10 
MAMMALIA. 
58. Hystrix pilosus. Canada porcupine. (F. B. A. No. 67.) 
New Caledonia. 
59. Lepus Americanus. American hare. (F. B. A. No. 68.) 
Woody districts from the Columbia to Behring’s Straits. 
60. Lepus glacialis. Polar hare. (F. B. A. No. 69.) 
Russian America, north of Alaska. 
61. Lepus Virginianus. Prairie hare. (F. B. A. No. 70.) 
Plains of the Columbia. 
62. Equus caballus. The HORSE. (F. B. A. No. 72.) 
Immense numbers of horses are possessed by the native tribes, which inhabit the plains of the 
Columbia lying between the fortieth and fiftieth parallels of latitude, and many herds of wild horses 
exist in that district. Some native tribes, and the resident fur traders on the Columbia, subsist prin- 
cipally upon horse-flesh. 
63. Cervus alces. The moose-deer. (F. B. A. No. 73.) 
New Caledonia, in small numbers. 
64. Cervus tarandus. The rein-deer. (F. B. A. No. 74.) 
Russian America, and at some seasons of the year in New Caledonia. 
65. Cervus strongylocerus. The wapiti. (F. B. A. No. 75.) 
Plains and timbered lands of the Columbia. (Lewis and Clarke.) 
66. Cervus macrotis. Black-tailed deer. (F. B. A. No. 76.) 
Rocky Mountains, on the Kooskooskee, and near the falls of the Columbia. 
Cervus macrotis, var. Columbiana. (F. B. A. p. 257.) 
This is the black-tailed fallow deer of Lewis and Clarke, who state that it is peculiar to the 
sea-coast at the mouth of the Columbia. 
67. Cervus leucurus. Long-tailed deer. (F. B. A. No. 77.) 
Prairies of the Cowladiske and Multnomah, and on the Columbia. 
A small stag was procured at Sitcka, in Norfolk Sound, by Kotzebue, which he thinks may be the 
Cervus Virginianus. 
68. Antilope furcifer. Prong-horned antilope. (F. B. A. No. 78.) 
Plains of the Columbia. (Lewis and Clarke.) 
69. Capra Americana. Rocky mountain goat. (F. B. A. No. 79.) 
Summits of the Rocky Mountains, and lofty peaks lying nearer the coast, up to the 62nd parallel. 
